Monday, June 23, 2008

Choice

I'm trying to decide on which grips to keep on my parkerized Springfield GI45. Several years ago I swapped a few parts to more closely approximate a WWII vintage M1911A1. I decided on walnut double diamonds back then, and i like the look of them on the pistol.

I have an extra set or two of genuine USGI issue plastic grips from WWII that would make the inexpensive approximation of a GI gun a bit more authentic. I don't like the feel or the appearance quite as much though.

I'm not one to play Barbie doll dress up with my pistols, I usually chose a set of grips and stick with them, but this one has me in a quandry. The more I look at the real deal, the more I like them. Whadaya think?

28 Comments:

For many years I believed (and still do to some degree) that pistol manufacturers shipped their wares with the cheapest grips they could find, so that they were shipping a complete firearm. Not a sinle one of my sidearms wear the grips that came with it in the box.

If I had to choose from scratch, I'd go with the double diamonds. However, you're trying to make a rough replica of a WWII 1911 and have even swapped out some parts. Why stop when you're very nearly there, especially on one of the most noticeable parts?

That really is a tough one, the plastic ones do look good but I am a double diamond fan. But the plastic ones give it a much more authentic look. I like wood but my vote is for the plastic. Unless you get wood ones that look like the plastic (without diamonds) like I got for my dad's old 1911.

The solution here is simple. Put the original GI stocks on the pistol, and enjoy the simple elegance of the basic pistol. Then go out and buy another one with ugly stocks and put the spare set on it. :)

That is a quandary indeed. The first are a nice choice, and prettier, but real is real.Good luck w/ that.

I have to say the authentic GI is growing on me, too.

I have a nice Rock Island Armory M1911A that I picked up a few years back for about half what a new parkerized Springfield M1911A would've set me back. It has basic plain wood grips; It's close enough for me. The only thing I would change on it is the magazine. My current mag has an extended rubber ridge thing on the bottom of it, doesn't look G.I. at all. Still, I like it.

Even if I had an all original USGI 1911A1, I would put 1911 style double diamonds on it and pack the plastic grips away somewhere safe.It's easy enough to put the GI grips back on should you ever decide to sell (only to buy a different 1911 of course).

that is pretty much waht I did to my Sistema, the original plastic grip panels and magazine are packed away safely, and the gun wears walnut grips and I use GI milsurp mags

When I was around 7 or 8 years old, my dad picked up a 1943 Colt 1911A1 from a local junk shop for $100 and brought it home and gave it to me (probably to justify the purchase to my mom more so than anything else). The pistol was bone stock, but the first thing he did was order a set of double diamond walnut grips from the pages of Shotgun News to give it a better look. The pistol still wears those grips to this day, and they now look original to it with the wear and oil from 25 years of use. I still have the original GI plastics put away, but nothing else looks right on these guns but the classic walnut double diamonds. I do have a mint, probably unfired Remington Rand that came our way several years later still shod with GI plastic, but it's not a working gun like the Colt which was my constant companion from then till my late teenage years when I discovered Smith & Wesson revolvers (but that's another story). Nice looking 45 you have there - leave the wood.

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Xavier is a Registered Nurse who specialized in complex wound care. He has practiced for over fourteen years in his community. He often provided nursing service in areas where law enforcement refused to enter without back-up. Xavier now works in surgery.
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